33 Victorians still missing

Deputy Commissioner Bill Kelly said police were now working to either match the missing people with unidentified bodies in Bali, or locate them alive.

In a happy result, Mr Kelly said two Victorians originally deemed missing were last night found alive and well - one elsewhere in Australia and the other holidaying overseas.

He said specialist police were collecting DNA samples from the families of those missing to help in the identification process, which was required under international standards.

"People will naturally want to go to Bali ... what we've offered here from Victoria Police is an alternative to reduce the stress of having to do that," he told reporters.

"We've only got the list of the missing and of those, we're not able to establish which ones are positively deceased at this stage."

Eleven experts from Victoria Police and the coroner's office are now in Bali, including a forensic technician and Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) specialists.

Mr Kelly said the specialists were trained to identify people who had suffered horrific injuries, or victims in multiple deaths.

"They're there to look at all of the pieces of identification which they might be able to get through DNA or any other photographs, jewellery, dental records," he said.

Premier Steve Bracks urged all Victorians to take part in commemorative events organised for this Sunday.
"I urge all Victorians to be a part of that and to think about how we ensure that we keep our way of life in the future," he said.

Prime Minister John Howard today toured the the bomb site at Kuta Beach on Bali, where at least 180 people, mostly westerners, were killed last Saturday night.